Champions Gate Junior Open

December 30 31, 2025
ChampionsGate Golf Resort – International
ChampionsGate, FL
ChampionsGate Golf Resort - International
The Champions Gate Junior Open wasn’t just another tournament on the winter calendar — it was a statement event, as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour brought elite junior competition to one of the most demanding venues in the country, ChampionsGate Golf Resort. From the moment players stepped onto the International Course, the tone was unmistakable. This was championship golf. Long sightlines. Minimal forgiveness. A layout that doesn’t bend to age, rankings, or reputation. ChampionsGate asked the same question of every competitor: Can you manage your game when nothing comes easy? Across all divisions, the course served as the great equalizer. Birdies were rare. Pars were earned. And momentum swung quickly for those who strayed from discipline. Players were forced to think their way around the golf course — choosing smart lines off the tee, accepting conservative targets, and learning how to grind when scoring chances disappeared. That’s exactly why this event fits the DNA of the HJGT. The Champions Gate Junior Open reflected what the tour consistently delivers: a professional tournament environment designed to prepare players for what comes next. From younger divisions experiencing their first true championship setup to older players sharpening the mental toughness required for collegiate golf, the week at ChampionsGate was about development under pressure. What separated contenders from the rest wasn’t raw talent — it was composure. Players who stayed patient, avoided compounding mistakes, and trusted their process rose up the leaderboard. Those who chased shots learned quickly that ChampionsGate doesn’t negotiate. By the time the final putts dropped, the message was clear. This event wasn’t built for comfort. It was built for growth. That’s the standard the HJGT continues to raise. Championship venues. National fields. Real tests. And an environment that mirrors the demands of golf at the next level. At ChampionsGate, players didn’t just compete — they were measured. And for many, the lessons learned on the International Course will matter long after the scorecards are signed.
boys 16-18
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The Champions Gate Junior Open delivered its toughest test where it mattered most — the Boys 16–18 division — as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour closed out the year on the demanding fairways of ChampionsGate Golf Resort. The International Course didn’t flinch. It stretched long, punished hesitation, and forced the oldest division in the field to prove they were ready for championship golf. This wasn’t about going low. It was about staying alive. Across two rounds, players battled exposed sightlines, long approach shots, and the mental toll that comes with a course offering zero margin for error. Pars mattered. Bogeys lingered. And momentum shifted hole by hole. At the center of it all was Kayden Jae of Bradenton, Florida. Jae opened with a steady 75 and followed it with a grinding 78, finishing at +9 (153) to capture the division title. On a course where chasing birdies often led to disaster, Jae played with restraint, trusted his process, and avoided the big numbers that derailed others down the stretch. Right behind him, Rory Sheahan of Garrett Park, Maryland, pushed until the final holes, finishing second at +10 (154). Luke Kang of Orlando, Florida, stayed firmly in contention throughout the championship, rounding out the top three at +11 (155). The margins were razor thin — one swing, one decision, one missed fairway separating first from third. The depth of the field told the rest of the story. Players fought through late-round fatigue, changing conditions, and the pressure that comes with competing on a collegiate-style layout. ChampionsGate demanded maturity — not just in ball-striking, but in emotional control. That’s exactly why this event matters. For the HJGT, the Champions Gate Junior Open once again reinforced its role as a proving ground for players nearing the next level. The International Course doesn’t reward potential — it rewards execution. It exposes weaknesses and accelerates growth in ways few junior venues can. When the final scorecards were signed, the takeaway was clear: this wasn’t just another junior tournament. It was a championship environment that mirrored what awaits these players in college golf and beyond. At ChampionsGate, the course doesn’t care who you are. It only cares how you compete.
Rank
Player
Total
No. 1 Rank
Kayden Jae
+9 Total
No. 2 Rank
Rory Sheahan
+10 Total
No. 3 Rank
Luke Kang
+11 Total
boys 14-15
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The Champions Gate Junior Open once again proved why the International Course is one of junior golf’s ultimate measuring sticks, as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour challenged the Boys 14–15 division on a layout that demands maturity, discipline, and the ability to grind when momentum refuses to cooperate. From the first tee shot, ChampionsGate made its intentions clear. Length off the tee mattered. Misses were punished. And every hole required a decision — play conservatively and survive, or take on risk and live with the consequences. It wasn’t about flash. It was about control. At the top of the leaderboard, Jack Grinton of Brookfield, Nova Scotia, Canada, delivered the most complete performance of the week. Rounds of 74 and 75 were enough to separate him from the field, as Grinton finished at +5 (149) to claim the division title. On a course where pars felt like birdies, his ability to stay patient and limit mistakes proved decisive. The chase was tight behind him. Blaise Barnum of Dublin, Ohio, and Finn Grinton, Jack’s brother, finished tied for second at +16 (160), each navigating the same demanding conditions with resilience and composure. Their performances highlighted just how thin the margin was between contending and falling back on a course that never lets up. As the leaderboard stretched, the theme remained consistent across the field: ChampionsGate doesn’t reward impatience. Long approach shots, exposed greens, and the mental fatigue of championship golf tested players late into both rounds, forcing them to manage not just their swings, but their emotions. That’s exactly the environment the HJGT is built to create. The Champions Gate Junior Open isn’t designed for comfort — it’s designed to prepare players for what comes next. Collegiate-style setups, professional tournament operations, and a course that demands respect combine to accelerate development in a way few junior events can. When the final putts dropped, the takeaway was clear. This wasn’t just another stop on the schedule. It was a proving ground. And for the Boys 14–15 division, the lessons learned at ChampionsGate will resonate far beyond the scorecard.
Rank
Player
Total
No. 1 Rank
Jack Grinton
+5 Total
No. 2 Rank
Blaise Barnum
+16 Total
No. 2 Rank
Finn Grinton
+16 Total
boys 12-13
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The Champions Gate Junior Open delivered another grind-it-out championship as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour challenged the Boys 12–13 division on the unforgiving grounds of ChampionsGate Golf Resort — a course that doesn’t care how old you are, only how disciplined you play. This was golf stripped to its essentials. Long holes. Minimal margin. One poor decision magnified instantly. The International Course demanded patience and emotional control, rewarding players who stayed within themselves and punishing those who tried to force the issue. At the center of it all stood Jeremy Zhang of Lincoln, Massachusetts. Zhang opened with a composed 75 before grinding through a tougher second round, closing with an 80 to secure the title at +11 (155). On a course where par was often a victory, Zhang’s ability to manage momentum swings and limit damage proved decisive. Close behind, Charlie Reich of Boca Raton, Florida, surged with a strong closing 79 to finish second at +18 (162), while Mervin Lee of Great Neck, New York, rounded out the podium at +22 (166). Each showed flashes of aggressive shot-making, but ChampionsGate ultimately rewarded those who trusted patience over power. As the leaderboard stretched, the real story remained the same across the field: survival. For many players, this was a first exposure to a true championship-style setup — long days, few birdie chances, and the mental fatigue that comes from every hole demanding full attention. That’s exactly the environment the HJGT is built to provide. Events like the Champions Gate Junior Open aren’t about comfort or low numbers — they’re about development under pressure. Learning how to compete when the course says “no” is part of the process, and this week delivered that lesson in full. At ChampionsGate, nothing came easy. And for the Boys 12–13 division, the experience gained across two demanding rounds may prove just as valuable as the trophy itself.
Rank
Player
Total
No. 1 Rank
Jeremy Zhang
+11 Total
No. 2 Rank
Charlie Reich
+18 Total
No. 3 Rank
Mervin Lee
+22 Total
boys 10-11
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The Champions Gate Junior Open delivered one of its most eye-opening performances in the Boys 10–11 division, as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour watched a young competitor turn one of junior golf’s toughest layouts into a personal showcase on the International Course at ChampionsGate Golf Resort. This course doesn’t soften for age. It stretches long, punishes indecision, and exposes mistakes without mercy. And yet, Licheng Hou of Land O’ Lakes, Florida, played it with a composure far beyond his years. Hou posted back-to-back rounds of 71, finishing at -2 (142) — a score that would turn heads in any division. On a layout where par is often a winning strategy, Hou attacked with precision, controlled his misses, and never let the moment speed him up. It wasn’t flashy. It was efficient. And it was dominant. Behind him, Seunghun “Ben” Hahn of Seoul, Republic of Korea, showed impressive resolve, finishing second at +12 (156) with two steady rounds of 78. His performance reflected the discipline required to stay competitive when the course refuses to yield. Third place went to Jiarun Lu of Beijing, China, who battled through a demanding two days and gained invaluable championship experience — exactly what events like this are designed to provide. What made this division special wasn’t just the leaderboard — it was the context. ChampionsGate doesn’t hand out confidence. It demands it. And for a player in the 10–11 age group to walk away under par across two rounds speaks to both preparation and maturity. That’s the standard the HJGT continues to elevate. These events aren’t about protecting players from difficulty — they’re about introducing it early, in a structured, professional environment that builds competitors for the long run. At ChampionsGate, the message was clear: talent may open the door, but composure keeps you there. And in the Boys 10–11 division, one player proved he’s already learning that lesson.
Rank
Player
Total
No. 1 Rank
Licheng Hou
-2 Total
No. 2 Rank
Seunghun (Ben) Hahn
+12 Total
No. 3 Rank
Jiarun Lu
+45 Total
girls 14-18
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The Champions Gate Junior Open demanded composure, patience, and grit as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour staged a year-ending championship on the formidable International Course at ChampionsGate Golf Resort — a layout built to expose every weakness in a player’s game. From the opening tee shot, the message was clear: this was not a scoring contest, it was a test of survival. Length off the tee, exposed fairways, penal misses, and demanding green complexes turned every hole into a decision-making exercise. Players who chased flags paid for it. Players who trusted their process stayed in the fight. At the top of the leaderboard, Audrey Bai of Hamden Hall, Connecticut, delivered the steadiest performance in the field. After opening with a composed 75, Bai navigated a tougher second round to close out the championship at +13 (157). On a course where momentum could flip in a single swing, her ability to limit damage and stay disciplined separated her from the field. Just behind her, Alicia Wen of Weston, Massachusetts, and Kelly Mu of Land O’ Lakes, Florida, applied consistent pressure across two rounds, finishing second and third respectively. Both players showed flashes of aggressive shot-making, but ChampionsGate ultimately rewarded control over creativity. The depth of the field underscored the challenge. From the top five through the final groups, players battled shifting winds, long approach shots, and the mental fatigue that comes with championship golf. The International Course didn’t care about resumes — it demanded execution. That’s exactly why this event matters. For the HJGT, the Champions Gate Junior Open once again delivered on its mission: creating an environment that mirrors what players will face at the collegiate level and beyond. Long days. No shortcuts. No easy holes. Just the expectation to compete, adapt, and finish. As the calendar turns, the takeaway from ChampionsGate is simple — this is where players learn who they are under pressure. And for those who survived the grind, the experience gained on one of junior golf’s toughest stages will pay dividends long after the final scorecard is signed.
Rank
Player
Total
No. 1 Rank
Audrey Bai
+13 Total
No. 2 Rank
Alicia Wen
+17 Total
No. 3 Rank
Kelly Mu
+19 Total
girls 13 & under
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The Champions Gate Junior Open closed out the calendar year with a demanding championship test, as the Hurricane Junior Golf Tour brought junior golf’s next generation to the International Course at ChampionsGate Golf Resort — a layout that doesn’t hand out confidence, it makes players earn it. Stretching across rolling fairways with exposed sightlines and relentless length, the International Course set the tone early. This was not a sprint. It was a grind. Every tee shot demanded commitment. Every approach required discipline. And every hole reminded players that championship golf rewards patience as much as talent. In the Girls U13 division, Mackenzie Malcolm of Hollis, New Hampshire, embraced that challenge. Across two rounds, Malcolm stayed composed on a course built to test resolve, finishing at +29 (173) to claim the title. Her performance reflected exactly what ChampionsGate demands — resilience, focus, and the ability to manage adversity without letting the round get away. This wasn’t about chasing birdies. It was about surviving momentum swings, minimizing damage, and learning how to compete when conditions don’t cooperate. For young players, that lesson is often more valuable than any number on the leaderboard. That’s the standard the HJGT continues to set. Events like the Champions Gate Junior Open aren’t designed for comfort — they’re designed for growth. From the championship setup to the professional tournament environment, the experience mirrors what players will face as competition intensifies at higher levels. As the season turns, ChampionsGate stands as a reminder: junior golf doesn’t get easier — players just get better. And for those who competed here, the lessons learned on Florida’s most demanding junior stage will carry far beyond the final putt.
Rank
Player
Total
No. 1 Rank
MacKenzie Malcolm
+29 Total